This is a edited version of an article from Feedstuffs.
Senator Grassley is mentioned.
May 6, 2002 | Issue 18 | Volume 74
WASHINGTON, D.C. --
The question is raised, How will this Farm Bill affect WTO and our
trade.
American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) president Bob Stallman and
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R., Iowa) had very different answers to
those questions last week. Stallman said during an
AFBF press event the new farm bill gives the U.S. some new
bargaining chips for the Geneva WTO negotiations. "I come from
Texas, and we know a little bit about deal-making and horse
trading. I don't know anybody that goes into a deal giving up
something without getting something."
In a power play, the new U.S. domestic subsidy levels will help
force other nations to negotiate a better agricultural agreement
in Geneva, he believes.Stallman said the criticism now coming
from other countries shows that the farm bill "has given us
strength going into the
negotiations.
Grassley had a very different view. During a floor speech last
week, he said in the wake of the start of the Doha Development
Round of WTO negotiations, "We can't say that we want other
nations to drop their trade-distorting domestic support and then
a few months later pass a farm bill that has a good chance of
busting our amber box commitments."
Grassley, the ranking member on the Senate committee that
oversees trade issues, pointed out that the U.S. has played "a
leadership role in the past 50 years of trade negotiations
because we have credibility." Passing a non-trade compliant farm
bill, however, "seriously damages our credibility," he said.
"I can't think of a more effective way to undermine everything
we've worked for ... than to pass a farm bill that we know might
break our WTO obligations," he added.
Grassley doesn't buy arguments that the bill will allow the
secretary of agriculture to cut U.S. farm payments if they
threaten to go over the $19.1 billion WTO cap. "Is it reasonable
to assume that any agriculture secretary would cut payment to
farmers ... just when farmers need help most?" he said.
Stenholm said, "We absolutely will respect WTO rules," but the
message of the bill is that "we will stand shoulder to shoulder
with our farmers, and we will negotiate down these subsidies."
©2002 Feedstuffs, Miller Publishing Company.
_______________________________
Navis Bermudez
Associate Washington Representative
Environmental Quality Program
202.675.2392
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